Donovan McNabb was apparently confused at the end of Philadelphia’s tie with Cincinnati on Sunday, uncertain that that game was actually over.

During the postgame press conference he created somewhat of a shockwave by admitting he was not aware that games could end in ties.

That, along with his three interceptions, earned McNabb a D- ranking, for what it’s worth, from Ross Tucker at CNNSI.com. Granted, the Eagles’ tie with Cincinnati was ugly – and McNabb’s performance was pretty bad as well. Despite commentators saying as time was running out that the tie wouldn’t hurt them because it was a non-conference game, it does, in fact, hurt the Eagles because they play in the NFC East, where their 5-4-1 record leaves them firmly entrenched in last place. If the Eagles miss the playoffs, at the end of the season they’ll look back at this game as one reason why.

But I think it’s a little disingenuous criticizing McNabb too harshly for not realizing a game could end in a tie. Eagles Coach Andy Reid took the blame Monday for that lack of knowledge should fall on him. Who cares? Previous to Sunday, the only tie that has occurred since McNabb has been in the NFL occurred in November 2002 when Pittsburgh and Atlanta deadlocked at 34.

Previous to that game, the last ties were in 1997the Eagles were involved in one of those, a 10-10 thriller with Baltimore during which Bobby Hoying was the Philadelphia quarterback and Ray Rhodes was the coach.

Sure, Reid could have mentioned the tie factor to McNabb – probably should have somewhere along the line. But they happen so infrequently that it’s easy to see why they hadn’t come up. Even overtime games aren’t that common and when they do happen, someone almost always wins.

So, if you want to be critical of McNabb for his poor game management Sunday, by all means, go right ahead. If you want to bludgeon the Eagles for not coming to play against a down-and-out Bengals team, rip away. But if the best you can do is rip on McNabb because he might have thought there would be another overtime you’re wasting your time. It was such a rare occurrence that it’s something he hadn’t seen before and probably won’t encounter again.

EDIT: Mike Florio of ProFootballTalk.com on his weekly KFAN-AM radio interview this morning said McNabb admitting to not knowing about ties will hurt his career long-term. “This will hurt his legacy more than anything he could have ever done,” Florio said.

Huh?!?!? Am I wrong on this? Someone tell me why anyone should care about this? It’s something that happens every half-dozen years in the NFL. It hurts nothing – if I am wrong, school me, please.